In this hermeneutic analysis of seven literary texts, Stephanie Barbe Hammer studies the roles of criminal protagonists in the dramas of George Lillo "(The London Merchant) "and Friedrich Schiller "(The Robbers) "and in the narratives of Abbe de Prevost "(Manon Lescaut), "Henry Fielding "(Jonathan Wild), "Marquis de Sade "(Justine), "William Godwin "(Caleb Williams), "and Heinrich von Kleist "(Michael Kohlhaas)."
Hammer reflects the current interest in cultural critique by utilizing the social theories of Michel Foucault and the feminist approaches of Helene Cixous and Eve Sedgwick to redefine the Enlightenment as a movement of thought rather than as a strictly defined period synonymous with the eighteenth century. In addition, through the examination of the works of three postWorld War II authors (Jean Genet, Anthony Burgess, and Peter Handke), Hammer suggests that the Enlightenment s artistic representations of criminality are unparalleled by subsequent modern literature.
Hammer explains that the seven works she focuses on have been dismissed as failures by readers who have misunderstood the texts aesthetic elements. While claiming that the form of these works breaks down under the pressure of their criminal protagonists, she asserts that this formal failure actually contributes to the success of the works as art. The works "fail" because, like the criminal characters themselves, they break laws. The criminal protagonist effectively sabotages the official story that the text seeks to tell by deflecting the plot, style, and formal requirements in question, subverting its messagebe it moral, sentimental, or libertine through a kind of structural undermining, forcing the text beyond its own formal boundaries. For example, Hammer maintains that the presence of the criminal figure, Millwood, in Lillo s bourgeois tragedy actually makes the play covertly antibourgeois.
Hammer insists that the criminal s subversive presence in these seven works inaugurates new insight, and her analysis thereby challenges late twentieth-century readers to continue the investigation that the works themselves have begun.
This book will prove indispensable to scholars of comparative literature, especially eighteenth-century specialists, as well as to all individuals interested in cultural critique."
- ISBN10 0809318318
- ISBN13 9780809318315
- Publish Date 21 January 1994
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 29 August 2012
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Southern Illinois University Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 224
- Language English